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HomeMy WebLinkAbout2001-09-18 - Orange Coast Pilot' SERVING THE NEWPORT -MESA COMMUNmES SINCE 1907 ON 1HE WEB: WWW.DAILYPILOT.COM 1UESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 2001 Attacks could drive re· • • • Heffernan, O'Neil say Newport Beach should at least discuss its position on the closed Marine base in light of last week's terrorist assault. June cu.gr.,. DAILY PILOT NEWPORT BEACH -The city's once unshakable supPort for an airport at the closed m Toro Marine base could be called into question after last week's terrorist attacks in New York City and near Washing-. ton, D.C. Councilman John Heffernan sciid he plans to bring up the top- Every Monday, Newport Beachs Bob Kost is on a mission: pull down " every ugly poster ic at next Tuesday's council meet- ing. At ~e. he said, is whether stepped-up national defense·and talk of war should change the city's position on El Toro. "This is no longer business as usual,· Heffernan said. •I don't know whether the rules have changed or not. This brings up a lot of questions: A longtime supporter of an airport at the closed Marine base, the city of Newport Beach QUUTION RETRENCHMENT? Should El Taro be twned blldl Into • Mmil'9 * bMe7 Call our Readers Hotline at (949) 642~ °'send e-mail to dailypllotO/atimacom. Please spell your name and include your hometown and· phone number, for verification purposes only. has spent millions of dollars to lobby for and raise public sup- po"rt for the proposed airport. Passenger flights at El Toro could absorb traffic increases projected for John Wayne Air- port, which otherwise would continue over Santa Ana Heights and parts of the city. A representative of the Department of Defense said there has been no indication that the federal government is reconsidering base closures nationwide. SEE EL TORO PAGE 4 g ofElTqro . Rohrabacherlashes out at past U.S. policy P•ul Clinton DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-MESA-The United Statei failed the fight against terrorism when il did not help those resisting the Afghan government, Rep. Dana Rohrabacher (R-Huntington Beach) charged Monday. In a speech from the House floor, Rohrabach- er focused his sights on former President Bill SEE POLICY PAGE 4 SupeIVisor votes with ai.Iport minority •Silva ditches pro-El Toro supporters and calls for a public vote on the proposed facility. P•ul Clinton DAILY PILOT NEWPORT-MESA -Tums out. the airport debate is still full of surpnses. lo a stunrung deosion Monday, Supervisor Jim Silva joined hls South County col- leagues in suggesting that the county's international airport plan be put to a publ.lc vote. he sees G~EG FRY I OAA.Y PILOT Newport Beach Police Department volunteer Bob Kost has a keen eye for filegal signs such as this one posted at a bus stop. Silva lent his support to a motion, proposed by SupelVl- sor Tom Wilson, to delay final- izing the planning bluepnnt for an international airport at the El Toro Marine Corps Air Station until county voters approve it. . WORKING UNDER A BAD SIGN Bob Kost bas a big problem with signs. The 77-year-old volunteer for tbe Newport Beach Police Department does not egree with all those people who use dty property as thelr penonal notice boards. •'lbele ldam a.re ugly,• Kost raves aboUt bis pet peeve. 11We &ave a beautiful city here. And t, like many ol our ddrw, would like to keep it that way.• Koit moved to the dty eight yean ago, after he wound up hil public relatiOns buiiness in Sl Paul, Minn. •The first month of retirement was nice," be A said. "But then I got antsier and antsier: So, be got a part-time marketing Job at the Grand Deck Golf Academy in the Pelican Hill Golf Oub. 1\vo years ago, he took part in the police Citizens Academy and became a volunteer. The tint thing that caught his eye as he patrolled the d.ty'l Ugly signs, he says. •ob, I don't mind the ones with the missing puppies and kittens,• be said. •:niose people probably don't know it's illegal to put up the signs. What really bug me are the huge commer- cial signs that say 'Earn $5,000 sitting at home' or 'Lose 40 pounds in two days:• SEE SIGN PAGE 4 T:Wnor claims young girl t ' j By supporting a public vote on the county's airport, Silva broke from the pro-air- port majority on the Orange County Board ol Supel'Vl.SOrs He jomed Wilson and Super- visor Todd Spitzer, who both have fervently opposed an airport at the base. In a second action, the board postponed final certl.fi- cation of the enVU'Onmental analysis until Oct. 16. In that 3-2 approval. Silva retwned to the p~rt fokl, which includes Supervisors C)'nthia Coad and Chuck Smith. After the meeting, Silva said be hasn't wavered in his desire to build a commerdal airport at the base. •I still support the e.l.rport," Silva said. •I'll be out talking to my dties to get a feel for what they want.• SEE AIRPORT MGE 4 - lld1Wk BACK Lunch ' munch The Daily Pilot visited Mrs. Everroad's flfth- grade class at Newport Elementary School and asked children whether they prefened buying their lunch at school or bringing It from home. ry shortcake.• Kaolin Daty, 10 Newport Beach ·1 usually bring because my mom says she wants to save money for my college education.• Jordan Griffin, 8 Newport Beach • , bri , •1 always buy because Jeanne [Gooney, the sthool's cook for 14 years) makes the best food ever, like rolls and strawber- ·1 buy because Jeanne makes really good homemade food, like bread and spaghetti.• :a Newport Beach unless 'ft.s piz- za day. I like piannlng for the day. Soo. times they'll have chicken strips like the kind you get at Burger King and those are good.• Vain Schmidt. 9 Newport Beach Christ Waldo, 9 Costa Mesa •1 buy unless we have a field 1rip.1 like Jeanne's bean blnttnsand ~.~to haveadlOb between two saCads 0( soup .• Daily Pilot gpeace DelrdreNewnun 0AA.Y PlwT W hat does peace mean to you? To the students in Jennifer Benbardus' fourth-grade class at Kaiser Ele- mentary School, peace took on var- ied shapes and forms on Friday: Peace looks like ... a beautiful rain forest. Peace feels like ... a fountain of love. Peace tastes like ... freshly baked cookies. Peace sounds like ... waves breaking against the shore. Her students explored the multi- faceted topic of peace using their senses and created storybooks with illustrations. Benbardus designed the lesson to foster peace in her classroom and to give her students an opportunity to address any lingering fean from Tuesday's terrorist attacks. •1 pnwented the ie.o.i fiat as it A fourth-grade teacher at Kaiser Elementary Gchool asks her students what peace means to them · relates to the d8951oom as a oootim1- ity c:i keeping the peace,. Benhardus said. •1 also tied it in with 'How could the tenodsts bave helped to keep peace instead c:i to hurt?'. Benhardus is a flrlt-year teacher who wu hired at Kaiser a few days after school started. Establish- ing a eeme ot community in her classroom became a top prlorlty. The students •need to realize we're a family here for nine months and we have to respect each other,• she said. The class discussed the t.em>rist attacb on Tuesday and the stu- dents composed journal entries lat- er in the week so they could write and illustrate their feelings. Fri- day's lesson was a chance to focus exclusively on the idea of peace. Benhardus started the lesson by talking about peace and then encouraged the students to walk around the classroom and put their spontaneous thoughts <m polterl that represented the different sens- es. CJallica.I music played in the background to provide a peaceful ambieDoe for contemplation. lbm .,.,,_.worked <m their own peace~ -wddng and Olultlating their peace statemeol•. Kimberly Vieyra, 9, dJew the sand, shore and seashells to reflect that •peace looks like a peaceful day in the beach .• Kimberly said one of the things she enjoyed about the lesson was using art to illustrate her feelings. •1 llke art. and I like writing about peace and drawing pic- twes,. Kimberly said. Peace looks like sailing to Rus- sell Bute, 9, who thinks peace is an important conc-ept to focus on. •Because without peace, there would be lots ol mW'der and crime,• Russell said. ~·lesson was just one of many going oo at the ICbooJ on the National Day of Prayer and Remembrance in response to the terrorist attacks. Kaiser Prtndpa.l Daryle Palmer said focusing on peace may relieve fean about the violent attacks. •There's no way to put closure on tt. but if you could wrap it up for a little while, that would help," Palmer said . Benbardus MUd she was impressed with the careful atten- tion her students devoted to the project. •· •it's hard to touch every kid. and I think this lesson might have done that," she said. • IN ntE a.ASSROOM ls a w..kly future in which Daily Piiot educ.tlon writer Oelrdte Newman Yistts • campus within the N.wport-Mesa Unlfted School District and writes about her operief a . 11.AQQS tt01UNE (M9)M2~ right Ho newt --lllulCmlonl, ldltorW IMttlf ot ~ .. S_,AIDSUI "9CiDrd ~ aimnlellU lbout 1he .p.1y~or,...dpl. agWsc Our liddr9 II JlO W. lay St., CMa Mlila, CA 12'17. • I , • ....... • tt .. the Plorl polci to~ CIOl'Ntt .. etron of~ ..... cal~ S74-4ZJJ . m ,,.~~--~ ... ~ ................. .. "'~leldtwr.-..-. PSI IJ•o .............. . ..... ,,. ... °'*"'~ ~JSHM1."'_ ..... .. .....-i1Mc111MCIMI ..... ... .................... .................... ,. .................. , ..... ___ ,_,~ ............ .......,_ .... ca. ....... -. ... .-.a. ... CA-.CW- her'llin CM be rtproducitd wMhout a.a.1'on The nn.·0ninge ~ (a) 25.2-1141 M:taM4 a..tftld .. Ma-5611 ' 0-.., .. IG.a21 ....... -----·-....... JM.G23 ......... 14Ml1'0 ......... -.t7D ...... ,,, llld ·-....... .......... MMW ...... ...... -n • Doily Pilot ., T~, ~ 18, 2001 J Anny worms were and are a handful Costa Mesa City CQuncil approves I see from the press that IOl11e locality ls having trouble with army worms. I bad not heard nor thought of army wonns for probably 80 years. I had assumed they bad disappeared from the fa.ce of the earth. Not IO. They have reappeared. church request to reopen pv For the uninformed, army worms are not like the common earthworm with which we are all familiar. Rather, they operate on the surface of the ground and ~-not the least bit beneficial. I know. When I was a sm~ child, I lived in the little railroad town of Green River, Wyo. One day, with no warn- ing whatsoever, great armies of sur- face worms appeared, usually in masses about the size of bed sheets. They would bit a lawn and, presto, the lawn would be gone. However, this wasn't too much of a problem in Green River because there were very, very few lawns. However, those little rascals did present a problem when they hit the rails of the railroad. The engine would pass over them, squash them, the tracks would get slippery, the engine wheels would spin help- lesf\ly and the train would stop. This, in a town that lived off the railroad, was unacceptable. And so the railroad placed two men on the cowcatcher in front of the engine, each armed with a sack of sand. These men would sprinkle sand on the tracks so that the engine would get some traction and off THE VERDICT the train went. 1ltis, of course, cost the railroads money, but there wasn't much they could do about it. Passing a law outlawing army worms would be somewhat of an act of futility. And then, presto, just as quickly as they arrived, the army worms disappeared. But, as I say, they seem to have reappeared. U there are tracks in those areas, my suggestion to the railroads is to buy up all the sacks of sand they can. As for the rest of us, just get used to walking careful- ly, because when you are walking over a sea of anny worms it's a lot like walking over ice. Perhaps cleats on the shoes are the answer, noisy but effective. • ROllERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident •nd a former judge. His column runs T~ays. •Memory of two cbildten killed in May 1999 by man who drove onto the playground is still fresh in the minds of city leaders. lollta Hwper OMV PILOT COSTA MESA -In the wake of a national tragedy, resi- dents reopened another wound Monday, one that cut deep Into the local fabric more· than two years ago. At its meeting, the City Council reheard plans for the proposed reopening of a preschool at Lighthouse Coastal Community Church, where two children were killed May 3, 1999, when Steven Allen Abrams drove his car onto its crowded playground. Council mernbeJ'S approved the church's plan to include a preschool on it site, providing the church does not allow tail- gate parties, bake sales and the like outdoors. If the church wants to hold such events, it must apply for another permit, Briefly!• THE NEWS Beach on Monday began emergency sewer repairs that will cause lane closures for about two weeks between Superior Avenue and Prospect Street. Lane closures are e xpected, and parking will be restnct- ed while the work is in progress. Traffic delays along Coast Highway Motorists can expect delays along two stretches of Coast Highway where road· work is.underway. -June Casagrande officials said. Chwcb official.I said they expect to~ a pretdM>ol for about 60 children in September 2002. Some council members said they still were concerned about the children's safety because the church's plan would require 3- and 4-year-old students to aoss Magnolia Street to get from the church's main parking lot, on the south side of Magnolia, to the proposed childhood center, on the north side. Concerned about the inci- dent two years ago, Council- woman Unda Dixon questioned the church's ability to ensure the safety of the children crossing the street. Church official Ed Deckert told the council there would be one staff member supervising no more than six childnm at a lime. wsix children to one adult? And you're OK with that?• Dixon asked. •r·m sorry, but I'ib surprised at that because there was a very tragic accident involved there. - Sierra Soto, 4, and Brandon Wiener, 3, were killed when Abrams drove his 1967 Cadillac onto the playground of the Soutbcoast Early Childhood Center, whidl nmted ~from the churdl. 1'be ~ wes dOled ln 58p' n>her~ and Abnum wu leDtllDced to life m prison in November. .. Deckert acknowledged the tragedy t>ut said be di(l not expect any copycats. •we cannot axitroa the people that drtve like maniacs, but what we can do ii ~ with the minbnum ratio and~ the most safety pollible, be Aid. In June, the coundl upheld a decision by the Planning Com- mission to prohibit the reopen- ing of a preschool at the Eastsidc church. Church officials requested a rehearing, saying the cound.l:s p~vious decision violated the11 constitutional rights. Sufficient grounds existed to justify the rehearing, according to the city attorney's office. Neighbors of the church. led in large part by Paul Wilbur, have said the plans are unsafe. Surrounding ·residents have also consistently complained about a wall, built after the tragedy as a safety precaution, saying it blocks motorists' views. In addition, the tightknit group said the church is too loud and its pennits are outdated. 50% OFF TOPIARIES & FLORAL The city of Newport Also on Monday, Caltrans began asphalt upgrades on East Coast Highway between MacArthur Boule- vard and Dover Drive. That work is expected to continue through late November. MEXICAN RESTAURANT Arrangements --· a....t 1:00.,, • 1;CO om IJ.F • 11:00 Mn .f '()()pm Sal r-------~----------, I 99¢~ I I Ga11ae1.r ! I Wllh Incoming ordlr. No limit MIJlt ~ coupon I I •fllOI vdd wit! rrr 04tw o11er • ....,8Mdl~~~10-1S-01 .J L------------------&?Gl< 3305 NEWPORT BLVD. ·Across from City Hall" 675-4072 Friday September 21st The days proceeds will be donated to the American Red Cross to aid victims of our countries recent tragedy. Pre-payment Requested. ·excwoes SUEDE LEATHE GOWNS HOUSEHOU> ITEMS 42nd Anniversary ''SELL ABRA TI 0 N '' EVERYTHING IN STOCK Home Decor • Specialty Furniture • Silk Florals Custom Floral Arrangements Mon-Fri 10-6 •Sat 10-5 •Sun 10-4 3M £ 17th Str«t. Costa f.frMJ.. CA ,_,_~, 949 646-67 45 An Evening With Young, dynamic, and extraordinarily engaging, Matthew Kelly comes to the aid of a generation desperately searching for some meaning in life deeRer than the pursuit of material things. Born in Sydney, Australia, Matthew Kelly is 28 years old. Exploring the challenges of our modern world , he orilliantly puts into context the unchanging truths of the life and teachings of Jesus Christ. From amidst an age inordinately preoc9upied with doing and having, Kelly's message rings out with a truth that is unmistakably .challenging and attractive: "What you become Is lnflnltely more Important than what you do, or what you have." ll, 1001 P0LICY CONTINUED FROM 1 Clinton, who he said should have fought the Taliban gov- ernment now in control of Afghanistan and reportedly harboring the terrorist sus- pected in lut week's attacks on America. •Por years I begged the Clinton adminiatration, our government, to support those restating the Taliban regime, to support former , King, Zabir Shah," said Rohrabacher, who's bist8ry with that country dates back more than a decade. •Lu,stead, the only response was a ltoilewalllng of my request to find out what wu our government'• real policy toward Afghanistan.• President Bush has promised to punish those Countries that provide aid and sanctuary to terromts. AIRPORT CONTINUED FROM 1 The actions Monday fur- ther delay the certlflcation of tl)e environ.mental report, viewed as a major step toward the construction of the fadlity. If it must go to a public .. .. PllLIC sum tt IO tbe deftnM will have a c:b•Q09 to DM.rby ac:lm1n11tei'ed emqency IOC* at the ~'w dllc:Overy. a1Uta.Dce, and WUhin a few But at aome pOlnt. proeecilton i.wtll momenta Olngua wu breathing on uk Rodmin to enter a~. be Mid. ' b1I own. . AddiUorW detaila ot Dingus' OCJD• Rookie lifeguard rescues ::,u:i;:z~:;~~ ~ surfer at ~ Cove lDJuriea tn the acdctent, N1d Kan Kramer, lUeQU&rd aupervilor for A 49.year..old man was lilted LP Cnrstel Cove State Park. serious coDdJtlon Monday, a day after •tr. a very stark remfnder of just a rookie lifeguard retrieved hhD from how dangerou:i the OCMD can be,• the water at Crystal Cove. Kramer said. Nathan Blair, a le.year-old part· Affer Labor Day, lifeguard ser- tlme llteguard. noticed a IUJfl>oud 1D vicel on Orange County beachel are the water about 11:30 a.in. Sunday at a minimum. Kramer Mid that, and, grabbing b1s btnoculan, MW the eapedally dwing the autumn and shape of a man beneath the aurface. winter month.I, IWimmert and turf en Peter John Dingua of Mis11on tbould try to stay near staffed llte- Vlejo wu uncomdous and underwa-guard towen or at leut have friends ter for about a minute by the time nearby when they're In the water. Blair, with the help of a passing He Mid the lnddent wu the tee· beachgoer, retrieved him from the ond seriou.1 near-drowning at Cryltal water. A doctor wbo happened to be eove· since the begtnning of IUIDJller. Osama bin Laden, who reportedly ii making bJ1 home in Jalalabad, Afghaniltan, bas emerged as the prime suspect in the terror bombings of the World Trade Center and the Penta- gon last week. Opposition to the Taliban regime -Muslim extremists who have been accused of imprisoning international aid workers, among other human rights violations - have been concentrated in a small pocket of the country. That opposition, known as the Northern Alliance, was deait a major blow when its leader died over the week.end after an assas- sination attempt. In his speech, Rohrabach· er also blamed the United States for abandoning Afghanistan after the Rus· sians pulled out their troops in 1989 after a 10-year stale- mate war in the country. Both Presidents Jimmy vote, the county's airport plan could be further put into jeopardy. The Navy has lndi· cated it would like to tum over the closed base to the county, which holds a lease on it, in March. Airport supporters said they were sh~ed by Mon- day's development. "I'm at a loss to be able to e~lain what occurred" at Carter and Ronald Reagan funded and armed rebel tighten during that time. • (W)hen the Russians left, the United States ... simply walked away,• Rohrabacher said. ·we left them with no resources to rebuild. . . . We let them sleep in the rub· ble." the board meeting, Newport Beach Councilman Gary Proctor said. Certification of the report "is already three years late. This has been delayed for so many different reasons that J just don't see any logic to what bas hap- pened.~ Shortly after his election to Congress in 1988, Rohrabacher traveled to Afghaniltan in secrecy. At the time, Rohrabacher spent five days with rebels fighting the Soviets, camp- ing in ravines and witness- ing artillery fire. Taliban clerics today will Wilson, who represents Newport Coast. has publicly objected to voting on the environmental report until the Federal Aviation Admin· istration releases a crucial air safety analysis. That analysis was due Wednesday but was post- poned indefinitely because of last week'• terrorist attacks. DOnate your vehicle. 1-888-308-6483 In 1998, South County leaders won a court victory against the county's fint environmental report, Envi- ronmental Impact Report 563, which forced airport planners to perform a major revamp. That revamp was incorporated into the latest report, known as Environ- mental Impact Report 573. Oddly enough, the two SoQth County supervisors, Wilson and Spitzer, both vot- ed Monday again.st postpon- ing the vote on the environ- mental report. Newport ~ach Council· man Dennis 0 Neil also said he was surprised at Silva's vote. ·That seems totally incon- sistent with bis prior posi- tions,• O'Neil said. ·trs very shocking, very confusing: • MUL CUNION cowrs the envi- ronment and John Wrtne Airport. He may be reeched .t (949) 764- 4330 or by e-mail .t f»ul.d lntone /•times.com. Set hope in motion to improve local lives. • RVs • Boats • ReaJ Estate • Tax Deductible NEWPORT HEALTH AND REHAB CENTER ~Care About Your Heoltlz I ADsle Nelaon o.c. Do you suffer from Carpal Tunnel Syndrome, headaches, low back pain, neck pain, wh iJ)lu h.. spans injuries, chronic fatigue, TMJ dysfunction! Millions of people doll Or are you just STRESSED OUT! Call for a complimenwy consultation and cu m (949) 724-1400 Insurance Accepted 3848 Cam us Or. Suite 104, Ne Beach. CA 92660 • Valanc:a & COm'" Bo.xa • RotiWi Shade. • Blindt ~ . . meet to consider turning over Bin Laden, after demands by Pakistan, the United States and other countries. In a statement read over Arabic television Sunday, Bin Laden denied responsibWty for the attacks. "The U.S. government has consiltently blamed me SIGN CONTINUED FROM 1 So eveiy Monday from 7 :30 in the morning to 4 in the afternoon. he rips off signs from lampposts, walls and anywhere else people might put them. And they keep him pret- ty busy. On Monday morning alone, Kost took down 25 signs in less than two howl. •Last Monday WU quite the record.. be added. ·1 pulled out 139 signs .• He IOid be does not know if these is a particular time when the numbers go up. "Usually it'9 higher dur· ing the beginning and end of the mooth.. ~ said And you SlD'e ·can tell wb4t part of the dty you're in by~ number of signs you see around you, he says. ·eorona del Mar bas the for being behind every occa- sion its enemie1 attack it,• the statement said. •1 would like to allure tbe world that I did not plan the recent attack.I, which seems to have been planned by peo- ple for personal reasons.• In hit speech, Rohrabach- er said he encountered Bin Laden during h1I vi.sit to the country. He called for the •ldlllng of Bin Laden and his gang of fanatics" to set a moral standard u a result of the terroriJt attacks. Rohrabacher came under some aitidlm in 1990 when . he invited Afghan rebel leader Gen. Ramatullah Safi to partidpate in Huntington Beach's Fourth of July parade. • MUL C1lllTON CO\lef1 the envl· l"OOIMt"lt and John W.yne Airport. He INY be rHChed .t (949) 764- 4130 or by e-mail .t J»U/.dlntone la times.com. biggest concentration,• he said. •'Jb.ar. where I UIU41· ly start. Then I go over to Balboa Island, the peninsula and then The Wedge.• In addition to removing signs, Kost patroll thole areas and reports suspidous d.rcumstanoes back to bis supeivisw. •He11 been doing such a terrlOc job,• Sgt Steve Shul· man Mid "He is really commltted., and lrs ainaztng the number of llgns be bas pulled off public property .• Most dtlel pass ordi· oa.ooes agatmt posting signs on public property, but most residents are not aware of the laws, he added. Kost said be would con- tinue to do bis job for as long as bis health permits. •Nobody gave me this job, but I'm happy doing it,• he said. ·u we don't keep up our beautiful dty, these signs could tum it Into East Los Angeles .• . Daily Pilot GIRL CONTINUED FROM 1 time lo c:elebrate her liberation from pain and suffering. •0t course, it is a Joa,• she added. •But it's a happy one. The last two weeks, she has been really tired. 1 lh1nk she was ready. She was ready to go: Olympius said her daughter was asked if she wanted to go through fwther treabnent that would help her live a little longer. ·she refused," Olymplus said. "She didn't want il • . Brianna did not suffer phys- ical pain except when she went through surgeries in which doctors tried lo remove the tumor. But when doctors studied the tumor after the first surgery, they found it grew very fast. That discouraged them from using gamma knife radiosurgery to remove the remains of the tumor after the first surgery. A garruna knife is a noninvasive tool that admin- isters low-level gamma radia- tion, which -unlike conven- tional radiation therapy -can remove the remains of a tumor in less than an hour. Brianna continued to be tor- mented by the feeling and the knowledge that she was not normal, her mother said. "That was her only pain, knowing that she was not like any other normal child." she said. Brianna's 12-year-old broth- er, Brandon, was having din- ner with ltis friends, cousins and undes about 8 p.m. Friday when ltis sister died at home. Around TOWN • Send AROUND TOWN items to the Daily Pilot 330 W. Bay St., Cos· ta Mesa, CA 92627; by fax to (949) 646-4170; or by calllng (949) 574- 4298. Include the time, date and location of the event. as well as a cont.act phone number. A complete listing is available at http:llwww. dailypilot com. TODAY A workshop on flnanclng your own business will be held from 9 a.m. to noon at National Universit~ 3390 Harbor Blvd, Costa Mesa. $25, $20 if prepaid. (714 ) 550- 7369. Three services will be offered for Rosh Hashana at Temple Bat Yahin. The services will be at 9 and 10:45 a.m., and 1 :30 p.m. The temple is at 101 t Camelback St., New- port Beach. (949) 644-1999. The Corona del Mar Cham- ber of Commerce will host a networking luncheon at 11 :30 a.m. al Five Crowns Restau- rant. 3801 E. Coast Highway, Corona del Mar. John David- son will be the guest speaker. $20, $30 without reservations. (949) 673-4050. The lh1rd annual Foundation for Education-Assisting Stu- dents of Tomorrow will bold its food and wine tasting event to benefit Orange Coast College's Hospitality Department's C~ary and Food Service programs. A silent and live auction is also scheduled. The event will run from 6 to 9 p.m. at the Big Canyon Counby Club, 1 Big Canyon Drive, Newport Beach. $75, $90 at the door. Seating is llmited. (!M9) 251- 0111. A support group for care· given of Alzheimer'• patients will meet from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. at Sllverado Senior Uv- ing-Newport Mesa, 350 W. Bay St, COsta Mesa. Free. Releriatiam ~· (9'9) 631-2212. I • Tlieiday, ~ i8, 2001 5 · Brianne put up a bra~ front. behind that facade wu a frightened young girl, her mother said. •She was afraid to die,• sakl O~piUI, who bad stdcal1y accepted the inevitable a ~ ago when doctors said Brianna did not have long to live. But Brianna was in denial. she &aid. "1Wo months ago, she wouldn't let me cut off. her pants." Olympius said. ·she wanted to grow tnto them.• Mother and daughter spent the last few weeks and months doing what Bnanna enjoyed doing the most -eating and playing Monopoly. ·She loved lobster and seafood,• Olympius said. •And we have three different kinds of Monopoly here. She played even the morning of the day she died." SEAN Hill.ER I OAU..Y PILOT In October, Brianna Olymplus plays with her cat at her Costa M~ apartmenL Olympius said she bas received tremendous emotion- al and financial support from the community and her family -sisters and parents. ·Before I left l lold her 'Bye, Bree' and 'Love you, Bree,' and when I came back she was gone, dead; he said. "l just don't know bow else to say it." On Monday, he was still looking at sheets of paper on which his mom had traced out Brianna's hand and foot. On top of the page was the date and time: Sept. 14, 2001, 8 p.m. Brandon and Brianna fought a lot -brother and sis- ter kind of stuff. "We'd always fight for the front seat,• he recalled with a smile. But they were also best buds. "She was the coolest sister WEDNESDAY The West Newport Beach Assn. will present a public forum on the Mariner's Vil- lage Public Improvement Pro- ject from 7 to 8 p.m. at New- port Beach City Hall council chambers, 3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. (949) 722-6421. THURSDAY A 90-Minute Breakfast Boost in the world,• be said. Brandon said he was •mad and confused" when his sister had to go through the surg- eries, but is dealing with it bet- ter now. "I'm just trying lo kick back and relax and get the aggres- sion out of my system.· he said. •She's in a better place now. She's not being teased, and she's not going through all the pain." Brianna has also touched many people at Newport Heights Elementary School. where she attended fourth grade Last year. Best friend Ashlee Roberson said she and Brianna enjoyed playing handball and jumping rope. Blvd., Costa Mesa. $25, save $5 by preregistering. (714) · 550-7369. Thea Reinhart and Monica Timpe-Godfrey of Morgan Stanley in Newport Beach will give a free seminar on the steps women should take to achieve finandaJ success. The seminar will take place at 11 a .m . at Borders Books, Music & Cale at South Coast Plaza, 3333 Bear St., Costa Mesa. (714) 279-8933. offered by the Costa Mesa The eighth annual Orange Chamber of Commerce will County Peace Walk/Jam will take place from 7 to 8:45 a.m. take place from 11 :30 a.m. to at Costa Mesa Country Club, 4 p.m. at 1iiangle Square in 1701 Golf Course Drive, C~-Costa Mesa. The free event ta Mesa: $17, $l2 prepa.td. celebrates the United Reservations requested. (714) N ti' , Int ti' al D f 885-909<> ...._ a ons ema on ay o · Peace and will feature live The Aun. of Professional Consultants will bold a meet- ing tilled, "Across the Desk: Senior Executives Discuss the Consultants They Hire and Those They DoJl't• at 5:45 p.m. at The Center Club, 650 Town Center Drive, Cos- ta Mesa. Reservations requested. $35-$55. (949) 675-9222. Newport Beach Coundlman Tod Ridgeway, a presentation from Sutherland Talla and a presentation by the Wetlands and Wildlife Center will be featured during the Central Newport Beach Community Assn. annual meeting at 7 p.m. at the American Legion Hall, 15th Street at West Bay Avenue in Newport Beach. Members and the public are encouraged to attend. (9t9) 673..()333. SATUIDIY A workshop designed to , teach tactics to make B-<.'Om· merce successful for a small business will be offered from 9 a.m. to noon at National Univeraitf, 3390 Harbor entertainment, raffles, non- profit group displays and an organized walk around the square. The Rev. Stoyanoff, (949) 646-4652. Mother· .. Market will host a free • Playsbop" and book signing on Lesley Tierra 's book "A Kids Herb Block" from 11 a.m. to noon at the Patio Cale for the playhouse, and 3 to 4 p.m. for the book signing at the book depart- ment. Reservations required. (800) 595-MOMS. James D. Lesueur, author of "Uncivil War: Intellectuals and Identity Politics During the Decolonization,• will sign his new book at 1 p.m. at Barnes & Noble Booksellers at 953 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach. (949) 759- 0982. A four-course, temUormal dinner party open to all Catholic singles ages 21 tO 45 living in Orange County will be held at 7 p.m . at the New- port Beach Golf Coune Tee Room. 3100 Irvine Ave., New- port Beach. R.e1ervation1 required (800) 5 i.-9090. •Brianna taught me every- thing I know about Chinese jump rope,· she said. "The day before she died, I was talking to hec..(!bout it and she showed with her fingers how she'd do Chinese jump rope, like she was doing it in her brain. It was cool.• Brianna went to school from Janµary to three weeks before the end of school, but couldn't make it beyond that. Ashlee says she misses her friend at school. "I used to wear glasses, and people made fun of me.· she said. "But Brianna always stood up for me, and she would never make fUn of me.· Even in the last days when BRIEFLY Park sale bill nears approval Tulk abOut squeezing it in under the wire. The state Assembly on Friday granted an 11th-hour approval to a bill to pave the way for a park on a v~cant strip of land at the oomer of Superior Avenue and West Coast Highway. State Sen. Ross Johnson (R-Irvine) introduced the leg- islation Jan. 25. The dty bas been trying to buy the land from caltrans for almost a decade to devel- op a park OD the weed-infest· ed site. The bill would transfer the land to California State Parks for use as a park. ln exchange for the transfer, Newport Beach would pay •al least equal to the acquisi- tion cost paid by the state,• the bill states. Caltrans bas resisted the sale of the land. which the d.ty has appraised at $4.1 mil- lion but offered $1.3 million. . The land has sat vacant since Caltrans bought it in 1966 and was unable to build a freeway on the prop- erty. · The land is known as •sunset Ridge Park• ·As a single mom, I couldn't have made it otherwise,· she said. Te ri Carano, Ashlee's mother, was one of the New- port Heights parents who spearheaded fund-raising for Brianna. ushe was one sweet little girl," Carano said. "She was smart in school. She was very determined, and that's what has helped her stay alive for so long. It was just so easy to love that girl." • DEEPA BHARATH cove~ public safety and courts. She may be reached at (949) 574-4226 or by e- mail at deepa.bharathOlatimes. com because of its view. Now that it has passed the Legi.Slature, the bill will become law unless it is vetoed by Gov. Gray Davis by mid-October. Lawmakers OK realignment plans State lawmakers gave final approval ThW'Sday to new maps for Assembly, state Senate and congres- sional districts. Under the plan, Costa Mesa would change assem- blymen from John Compbe1l (R-bvine) lo Ken Maddox (R- Gal'den Grove). Rep. Dana Rohrabacber (R-Huntingtoo Beach) would also see some changes. losing a small chunk c1 Newpcxt Beach to Rep. Christopher Cox (R·Newport Beach). In the Senate, both cities would continue to be repre- sented by Ross Johnson (R· Irvine). Maddox, a fmrty OlllSe?V· ative Republican. bas said he ls enthusla.stic about the prospect of representing a.ta Mesa. Gov. Gray Devis must sign off Oil the plans by Sept. 26. Celestino's~ quality MEATS ,.. The Anesi Mew and S<•rl'ire At 1Q1lable 5n..m., Quu Ma. for owr JO JM" ' Apple Cinnamon Cd1Uilto'• sturred Pork s399 lb Ud or. Hot Chops Italian ~ Traditional Stuft'ed Cbkken Brust s399 Sausage s349 lb • lb. Lamb-K-Bob's Marinated In Wine Mint Sauce .$699 lb. C•l'1•d.lto'• Al~a In Seaon Try: Our Dellcious Crab Cakes $ 99 CMdllto._ Ranch FreSh Egs . S} 98 doz. FEEDIACI Community discusses attackS AT ISSUE: In the aftermath of the events. Americans -residen1S in Newport-Mesa induded -have come together to aid one another. H ijacked planes were used as missiles for destruction and chaos in an attempt to cripple America. Instead, they awakened a sleep- ing giant. We bad grown comfortable with a false security that wars would not touch our soil. We enjoyed an unparalleled prosperity that pro- duced a dangerous complacency. We took our freedoms for granted. That changed with the despicable attack by demented enemies as we saw them brutally destroy innocent lives and important landmarks. Out of the ashes of pulvertzed con- crete and melted steel, the strength of America has been revived. The media enabled us to witness unpreced~nted patriotism, unity, heroism, generosity, love and compassion in people all over America. Perhaps most impor- tant of all, the tragedy served as a reminder of our need and dependen- cy upon the almighty God. Our enemies misjudged the Ame.rican spirit, and in so doing caused us to be educated and ener- gized for the unique war they 1*ve declared. Now we must pray for those who are dealing with the grief of losing loved ones, as well as wis- dom and discernment for our leaders and the decisions they must make in the days, possibly years ahead. BONNIE O'NEll Newport Beach The events of this week have· gone beyond the horrific and our minds cannot comprehend th~ monstrous actions of people.killing innocents. It is not the fiJ'St time in human history nor sadly will it be the last. But they are events that are happening. And they are happening in my li{etime and are affecting me and my family, friends, community and country. I want to hear every story. I want to see every tear, know every name. I want my ears to burn with the weeping of widows and the anguished cries of children sean:hing for parents. I want my heart to con- tinue its aching and sadness. I want to bear the stories of heroes, the self- less sacrifices of my countrymen offering their time, resources and prayers. I want my blood to travel 3,000 miles to find veins in need. I want ~ things to sear ~ soul lest I ever forget this moment. Our country was given a terrible gift of evil. But we have been deJiv- ered grace, and compassion and hope. And now it falls upon the ~boul­ ders of everyday Americans, united by the common good, to reach a<:ross this precious and great land to broth- ers and sisters heretofore unknown, and in their grea~ boun of n~ Americans are at their very best when times seem worst. That's why the eyes of the world look to us time and again. We lead in adversity; rise in the face of despair. We build ;when I I I I SEAN HIU.£R I DAILY PllOT Doug Doyle partldpates tn NaUonal Day of Prayer and Remembrance services cturtng bis hmch hour on Prtday at Calvary Olurch Newport Mesa. others see disasteri we conquer when others acquiesce to defeat. Americans are a breed apart -are now and always have been. I revel in our latest triumphs and laugh in the face of this new terror. They have no idea who we are. CARL E. OSSIPOFF Newport Beach Never in my lifetime of 82 years would I have thought I would expert- ence the devastation and the destruction of innocent lives as those of Pearl Harbor and the World lfade Center complex. Our lives wjJl change as we once knew it. May God protect and bestow his protection and blessings on the families and loved ones of those who have perished so need- lessly as the result of these atrocities. JIM OENUCOO Newport Beach lf we do not apprehend the leaders of the Sept 11 terrorism, the teJTOrists' having hijacked four planes apparent- ly with no WlSUCCeSSful attempt and the amount of devastation caused will encourage more terrorism. Furthermore, apprehension of them will cause terrorism with the objective of obtaining the release of the guilty. Execution of the leaders will make them martyrs in the eyes of many who will seek to cany on the sick acts of the leaders. Punishment will achieve little. However, perhaps the people who want revenge are entitled to whatever little satisfaction may come from it. We should plead again with Afghanistan for its help in the extradi- tion d Osama bin Laden. this time with the message that whether he is involved in the Sept. 11 terrorism or not. be must stand trial oo past temxism. That's because we value lives and try to avoid injury to the innocent. We prefer voluntary extradition. Absent such, we will destroy him even though doing so involves the loss of innocent persons as well as conspirators. Concurrently with the delivery of the message, we should recall any of our diplomatic representatives who may be in Afghanistan and shortly do as we have threatened, hopefully without American casualties. ROY B. WOOLSEY Newport Beach READERS RESPOND Daily Pilot co .. u11n COMMENTARY New JXlrade changes aren't necessarily clear 9y_ Mlc:hHI Mllllbn A s noted in your Sept. 1 article (•Changes afloat for the boat parade"), Dayna Petitt pre- dicted that •there are going to be a lot of people upset about the parade route change" if it is decreed that the parade won't pass the homes on either side of •the entrance to the harbor.• Furious would have been a better choice of word than "upset.• I phoned three politicians whose names I'll not print. None knew what ·the entrance to the harbor" meant, so I'm hoping the entire Newport Harbor Area Chomber of Commerce is equally confused and will be able to appreciate what I have to say. I can assure Richard Luehrs, president and chief executive of the chamber, l will be very perturbed if the chamber should decide to shorten the parade route so that the parade will not go beyond the M Street pier. Such a shortened route will eliminate from enjoying the parade all the residents and guests of the homes on either side of the •entrance to the harbor.• including the high density Channel Reef. Additionally deprived will be the large number of peo- ple who always watch the parade nightly from the West Jetty and its park, plus from the East Jetty and the adja- cent Corona del Mar bluffs. I'm sure these visitors buy meals, mementos and other items that bring money to the city coffers, wb.icb under- standably is of paramount concern to the chamber. I can understand why Councilman Steve Bromberg ls •relieved" and "pleased" that the original decision was changed so now the parade wW go by his home, which thereby will "keep the char- acter of the parade for Bal- boa Island. I am neither a member of the chamber nor a member of the City Council. but I have intermittently lived on the waterfront of the penin- sula for more than 60 years and have enjoyed the parade probably as much as has the coundlman and possibly for more (taxpaying) years. I'm sure that many resi- dents, local guests and out- of-town visitors on both sides of "the entrance to the har- bor" will be very sad they cannot enjoy this marvelous and historic Christmas cele- bration with the rest of the bayside residents. For more than 40 years, I've entertained guests intermit- tently throughout the seven nights of this yearly pageant I had planned to continue this for many years to come: so I do not. and many of my annu- al guests will not, "think, ulti- mately, this will be a fine COJJ\- promise" as stated by the councilman who also •enter- tains guests during the parade each year.• Lost will be "the character of the parade for" "the entrance to the harbor.· Ever since I became old enough to appreciate the incredible effort made by all the participants in the parade , I have wondered lf these hardy souls would fare better if they could run this long but beautiful course on a fewer number of nights. I believe there is no other harbor in the world that does such a long parade with so many partici- pants for so many nights. As you know, most harbors have a Christmas boat parade for only one to three nights. (Can you imagine the Tournament of Roses Parade being under- taken for seven days?) Consequently, the answer to lessening the hardship and increasing the enjoy- ment for all concerned will be to decrease the number of nights the parade Is put on, but maintain the route unchanged so the greatest number of people around the harbor can witness this glori- ous and happy event. In 1908, the eight lighted canoes and the single gondola did not go all around the har- bor because most d that perimeter was barren land. Nowadays. revelers d all sorts. incb>ding taxpaying home- owners, eagerly wait for at least one night of the parade. U here today, I bet neither John Scarpa nor Joseph Beek -the parade's founders - wouk1 let anyone down along the full route: I also bet~ wouldn't do this for seven nights in a tow (so to speak. they'd have enough sense to come in out d the rain). The powers that be decide what nights they want elimi- nated. Then, on the sensibly fewer number of nights when the Newport Beach Christmas Boat Parade of Ugbt:s tours the harbor, the y can be assured that the rest of us wW be there loving the spectacle and the spirit and happily cheering on this his- toric tradition that truly belongs to Newport Harbor. • lllCJIAEL • 1 •M is a Balbol Peninsula resident. Keep the !Christmas parade bo~.ts afloa~. and route intact I AT ISSUE: Most readers settm to agree that the days should bi Shortened for the N~rt Harbor holiday event. I allowing participants to focus on five nights versus a lengthy seven. By shortening the route, lt wW allow participants to get beck to their booths an hour early. That would lessen the time that eaCh participant baa during an alteady hectic time of year. The two . ~ wUl greatly iJnprove the IOOk ol tbe parade, and l think It will billP PutidlHlntS get more iCtiY8 .mc1 be more involved f.n the ~ time and brin&,':, and friends to enjoy thil festivity. CAROL WElmR Newport Cout It's about time you cbaDged it. It'• way ovwdue. 1t•1 a goOd move. • DONMllNTT Udollle . . . Gucnici111DAY •• • 1t you lelt the club, you had to pay $100. Nobody had $100, so they all stayed at the 'club ... " Jeff Schllct, SACC general manager, on why golfers stayed on at the club during the Great Depression: mOPBB ~~ ~2"'~ COll.EEN LUND Doily Pilot lpom lcllar Roger Carlton • 949-57.U223 • lpol19 fax: 949~50-0170 Tuesday, SepMfnbtw 18, 200 l 7 Where . Eagles bail Estancia's decision to cancel football game with Aliso Niguel was made for the wrong reason. Discussion of sports in the aftermath of Sept. 11 has often included a qualifying statement about the insignificance of it all in the grand scheme of things. And, who could argue. In this grand scheme, and against a backdrop of a gnevmg nation, does the fact that Estancia H1gh canceled Saturday's football game at Aliso Niguel matter in the least? One could argue, however, the grand scheme of things is precisely why the Eagles, specifically first-year coach Jay Noonan, should not have pulled the plug. For a moment, allow me to divert the context of this debate away from the one that raged nationally last week as to whether it was or was not appropriate for r .,_, .. ff' I Barry Faulkner PREPS professional and college teams to play games through Sunday. For, I believe, that context supplied merely a converuent out for Noonan, who based his decision on other rationale, namely the inabihty to compete at full strength. Noonan saJd the Eagles 40-man roster would have been sigruf icantly depleted for a Saturday game, due to job and family commitments by more than a dozen of his players. These SaturdAy scheduling conflicts would not have been an issue had the game been played Friday rught, as scheduled, before the Orange County superintendents directed schools not to bold athletic contests on the National Day of Prayer and Remembrance. Injuries that would have forced four additional Estancia players to the sideline were also a factor. But • hard to imagine the Eagles could not have put at least two dozen players on a bus Saturday afternoon and fulfilled their scheduled commibnent. The fact that this limited contingent might have included several backups was not sufficient cause not to compete. Not competing, in fact. sent the wrong message to the Estancia players, who, responding to the enthusiastic leadership Noonan had displayed since takiflg the job, have shown admirable determination to prove they in fact can compete against schools with more experience and talent. The cover of the Estancia program for the Sept 6 season-opening home game against Magnolia featured the catch phrase •strength and honor.• By canceling Saturday's game, the Eagles displayed a shortage of both. EatmcU was iar from the only football program that didn't play lest week. By my best count, 20 Orange County schools did not play scheduled vilrsity games. FootbUl COlidael at lour Newport-Mesa high schools said players SEE PREPS MGE t Corona del Mar · ·S Color guard is added to Saturday's ~big bash. Richard Dunn DAILY PlloT SANTA ANA HEIGHI'S -Santa Ana Country Club pioneers survived World War l, the Great Depression and WWII. It seems only fitting that the oldest golf club In Orange County, which will celebrate its long-planned centennial Saturday night at the private dub, will add a color guard to the festivities •to recognize the Incident.• SACC General Manager Jeff Schlict said, of Tuesday's terrorist attacks on New York and the Pentagon. ·we're also looking at a Uttle higher numbers as far as attendance (Saturday),• said Schlict. who Is expecting about 500 members and guests. •Some are procrclstinators (and register late for tbe party), while others have had travel plans changed since the tragedy, so our numbers are going up.• The event. which co~ be the greatest private golf celebration in ~e County history, will start at 6 p .m. and continue until midnlght. A live on:heJltrale wlth dandng will perform outside under tbe stars following ceremonies near the lake at 14. HIGH SOIOOl. IOYS WATER POLO C orona del Mar IUghgoalle Sherwin Kim, seen here defending agaln.st Servtte last year, and bis Sea Kings teammates, open South Coast Water Polo Tournament play OD Thursday, hosting Dana Hills at 3 p.m. With an anticipated victory (CdM ts top-seeded 1 in its pool and Dana Hills ls eighth-seeded), the Sea Kings would return at 7 p.m. for a second-round matcbup. Also in the 32-team tournament. featuring a great deal of the cream of Southern California high school boys · water polo, ls Newport Harbor, which ls third-seeded in Its pool on the Newport campus. Newport opens with Fallbrook at 6 p.m. Thursday, and will continue in the tournament on Friday. The championship and third-place games are Saturday afternoon at Newport Harbor, at 3:40 and 2:30, respectively. DON LEACH/ DAllY ~OT i\ANACC'S One SACC member bas created a video for the celebration that will focus on the G~t Depression of the 1930s, during which the club was S50 to join with monthly dues of $7 .50. •But If you left the club, you had to pay $100. Nobody bad $100, so they all stayed at the dub,• Schlkt Mid. reflect1ng on Santa Ana Country Club lore. The dub is al9o working on a book« the first 100 yean, wbk:h will be completed with photographs from Saturday's celebratk>n, aJ\d, a time capsule to be opened at the blcentennlal celebration in 2101. Ma.rianne 'Ibwersey, the club's 17-timewomen's champion. has •wrltten a wonderful epilogue for the book.• said SACC member Paul Watkins, Chairman of the Santa Ana Country Club Centennial Committee. Alyce Hall. 95, bas been one of the club's oldest members, but she moved to Vermont last month to be closer to family and reportedly will not be in attendance Saturday. The late Gerald Hall, the club's longtune bead professk>nal who collaborated with Watkins to wrtte a book about the first 90 years, will be missed Saturday by many. He died July 31 at age 78. 1be celebratkm will include a nostalgic look at the first 100 years, along with a museum. an oversize cake to sene 500 guests and fireworks. The club's main dining room will be transfonned into a tum-d-the-century golf club, complete with a sand putting green. In 1901, when Santiago Golf Qub wa.s formed, a precunor to Santa Ana Country Qub, the first golf hoJel in Orange County were ~yed on oil-soaked sand for •greens• and native soil. or bard dirt. for fairways. Food at the centennial celebration will .iso be •tailored toward that era,• Schlict said, with handmade tortiDu and Other early California tafltal. Next for members and guests wm.·be the mmeum. SEE 100 YEARS MGE I COASTERS: -(DISI m•• €ostaMesa Newport Harbor -··-. a..AM9GA .... 190.Jr .. TB . . 18, 2001 nmtaaa..Wplaoto tMentatmoes-ta AuComtryQab wlddl.......-ba Gerild E. Hall's 'A~ofllles.nta Ana CCMlldly OU.' .. Tbe ..... baOdlag Dear Ille carpoi;tl WU tbe ceclc:ty IMck. the site of todaYI goU shop. 100 YEARS expected to open today and remain open to members through Sept 24. CONTINUED FROM 7 which will provide an interesting historical look at Santa Ana Country Club with photographs and information posters. The museum is After a tour through the museum. centennial party-goers will move outside to the lake at 14, where the large body of water will represent •the Castaways,• the club's second of three locations. The club originally leased acreage RUNNING Registration underway for Harbor Heritage Run . The only major fund-raiser sponsored by the Newport Harbor High School PTA, the annual Harbor Heritage Run bas raised nearly $300,000 to promote and enhance academic programs at the school. For the first time, the race has been designated an official warm-up for the Los Angeles Marathon in March. The Oct. 6 run will feature a SK race along a scenic course offering ocean views and bree-zes. There will also be a 2K tun walk/run, as well as a Kids' Klassic Race for children as young as 5 years old. A bee warm-up and~ fair will begin at 7:30 a.m .. with the fair and frae refreshments until 10 a.m. The 2K race starts at 8 a.m. and the SK race starts at 8:30 a.m. All children 10 years old and younger who finish the Kids Klassic will receive a souvenir. Entry fees will range from $20 for adults, $18 for students, and $15 for children and include a race T- shi.rt. For further information call: 949-645-5806. To register online: www.kathylopereventa.com/hhr. TODAY'S sotEDULE MJIPOW High school boys • Orange at Costa Mesi. 3:15 p.m.; Huntington Be.cf'llt Estancia, 3:15 . yowDM1 College women • vangu.rd at Point Lome~ 7 p.m. High school girts -Coronl def M¥ at M«iN. 6 p.m.; S. Hill 115. Tmoro, at~ 8udl Volteyt»ll Oub, 5:30 p.m. llllll High school girts -CosU Mesa at foothll~ 3:15 p.m~ ~at SavtnN, 3: 15 p.m~ Cotonl def M¥ at C.plstrano v.i~ 3 p.m. ~ Community college men • Palomar •t Orange Coast. 4 p.m. Community college women • Orange Coast at Cypress. 3 p.m. -~leg. men · ua. Long Beach St., UC Riverside at 'southern Cllifomla ~at 8HtMIOnt, ... d9y. • High school girts • Coronl def MM 115. 'Woodbridge at Newport Beach CC. 2-.30 p.m. ::.z ...... Dal Pilot in the Peters canyon area, a small valley two miles southwest of present- day Irvine Park, where club founders built a nine-hole course. In 1912, the members moved to a lf>O-acre site at the Castaways along the Newport bluffs and renamed the club Orange County Country Club. The club moved to its third. and present, site in the 19209 for water irrigation purposes as golf counes · turned to grass fairways and greens. In April 1923, it was announ~ that Orange County Country Club would move to Santa Ana Heights at Newport Boulevard and rename itself Santa Ana Country Club. The club paid $71,000 for the property. After speeches and a video pre- sentation. there will tie fireworks and the cutting of a large centennial cake, then spirits and dancing will last until midnight Watkins, SACC men's club president Ken Shelton and women's club president Janet Cencel will cut the centennial birthday cake. COWGE MEN'S socaR lJCI stuns Bruins, 1-0 Cooper gets a shutout without a sweat as Anteaters give UCLA a wake-up call. WESIWOOD -lbe seventh-ranked UCLA men's soccer team dropped a 1-0 nonconference decision to visiting UC Irvine in a make-up game at UCLA's Prank W. Marshall Field Monday. In the ninth minute, UC Irvine senior Saul Wolf took a free kick that SCOlllOUI rebounded off UCLA defenders and ua 1 fired it into the back of the net for the UCLA o 1-0 lead. It would prove to be all the .__ ___ __, Anteaters would need. Bruin goalkeeper Zach Wells, a product of Newport Harbor High, made seven saves in the contest Anteater goalkeeper CJ. Cooper was credited with no saves as UCLA was unable to get c:lf a single shot on goal. Actually, the Bruins took nine shots, but nothing came close to causing Cooper any concern. UCLA drops to 2-2-1 on the season. The Anteaters, with their first victory over UCLA since 1994, improve to 3-0-1. The game was originally scheduled to be played on Sunday, but was moved to the next day because of the terrorists attacks on the East Coast •unfortunately, with all the time between our last game (UCLA last played on Sept. 9), we io.t the winning momentum that was with us in San Francisco,• said UCLA Coach Todd Saldana. ·we started slowly today and paid the price with a fairly early goal. •uc1 battled hard and defended well to keep us from equalizing the score. Hopefully, this game can be an early·season lesson in how we must approach all of our matches in the future.• The unbeaten Anteaters return to action Friday when they'll duel Loyola at the Loyola Marymount Tournament, starting at 3 p.m. 151.h Annual Harbor He~e Run RUN NEWPORT! WOMEN'S GOlf UCithird PicUtequtCOU'll ...... NaapClt ...._... Oftlrl glflly rolng 1111. ocw Ind..,._ lcoal tnllil SK FEA1URE RACE • II FUN RUN/WALi w~~ e Plus Kids' Klasslc Race . ~ and Free Fitness Fair t.GIOC-.f#~-.... -111.119Cf ......... _.. ldlool SATURDAY OCTOBER 6, IH1 r:-------~--------BllSTIAllON fOllM-----• 111111 '11 ·~lllf-• . ODDO I 2001 NHHSJj#l)Or Heritage Run I P.O.Box2934 OFFICIALUSEONL.Y Newpol1 Beech, CA 92659-2934 (949)945-5806 To,.....,onllnt:ww~ -DAVID YURMAN UC Irvine's Stella Lee fired a 1-over 36-36-73 for third place at the Southern Califprnia lntercollegiates at the California Golf Club in Calimesa Monday to pace a tbinl-plaoe finish fot the Anteaters behind Pepperdine University and the University of San Francisco. Hye-Yoon Jung carded a 38-38-76 for UCI for seventh place and Shelly Raworth was 20th with a 39-&2-82. oom Support Our Schools. PREPS CONTINUED FROM 7 and coaches alike were undentandably dispirited during practkle preparation, following the terrorist attacks on New York City tnd Wuhington D.C. Corona del Mar Coach Dick Freeman laid one of the most dilconoerting aspects of practidng 14lt week was the ablence of airplane traffic over the campUI practice field, located along the John Wayne Airport flight path. •we're \lied to having to stop talking about every four minutes, because you can't hear anything ater the jets,• Freeman said. "The quiet 14lt week was really strange.• loth football gmna I attended Saturday featured a moment of llilence and the players from Costa Mesa and Westminster high schools met at midfield for pregame handshakes after the playing of the National Anthem. Centennial High. from the Canadian province of British Columbla. has eecwed air travel for Friday's 1 p.m. game against Cotta Mesa at Newport Harbor High. But, the Centaurs, originally scheduled to arrive Wednesday morning, which would have enabled them to practice locally that afternoon, will not arrive until Wednesday night, according BUSTERS . GAMESIOPPIRS Lut '"*'• .... dlftlll've p&aya • NEWPORT HARBOR -End Bryan Ireland nailed ball carrier for a 1·yard 1oa ... tackle !klott Kobaa led a pUlb that retulted in a 6-yard 1oa on a dive play ... Outside linebacker 'JYler Miller foiled an opUon play for a 4-yard 1ou ... Sofety Warren Junowtch made a diving interception to aet up touchdown drive ... Mlller and end Da'V14 Manball combined on a stop for no gain ... Comerback Adam ICerm dragged QB down on fourth down keeper to tum ball over to Tars ... Miller tackled kickoff return man at Marina 13-yard line ... End Matt Cauerly bad a sack for a 10.yard loss, then, three playt later, combined with Kohan to create a 5-yard loss ... Middle linebacker Corey Jlay made a big hit to turn a screen pass into a 2-yard loss ... Kema made a tackle for a 3-yard loss ... Comerback Bryce Sawyer intercepted and returned it 60 yards to end Marina's deepest penetration. Troy defender to spring teammate on a 52·yard run ... Outllde linebacker ICrll Cooper put a big hit Qn a receiver on a ahort gain ... 'Iackle Jayaon Sbl1a bolted up the middle for a quarterback sack, a 9-yard la.a ... Cooper and e.nd 'JYlu MeC1ellm teemed up on a atop for a 1-yard [os1 ... End Dave Simon ended a Troy drive by stuffing a 1aeen pus on fourth down tor a '·raid io.1 ... Outside linebacker Jeff Reed stripped a Troy runner o the ball and it was recovered by Ward ... Skalla found another free route to the quarterback for a 10-yard sack ... Inside linebacker Matt Cooper and lineman John Daley converged on a runner for no gain ... Daley made a tackle for a 4-yard loss ... Skalla clamped down on a noy runner for a 1-yard loss. • COSTA MESA -Outside linebacker Matt Colby stuffed a draw for a 2-yard Joss ... Noseguard Borotha Pov and middle linebacker Keola Aluega led a pack of tacklers on a 1-yard loss ... Tackle Brian Rayner'• penetration keyed back-to-back stops for no gain ... Colby made another stop for a 2-yard loss and pressured the quarterback into an incompletion on the same series ... End Junior EpeneA combined with Rayner on an 8-yard QB sack ... Linebacker Bobby Arroyo made sacks for losses of 1 and 5 yards ... Safety Pn!tldy Rodriguez intercepted at his own 2 to halt a dnve. • CORONA DEL MAR -Lineman Joaeph Carr stopped a Troy drive by recovering a fumble ... Jonathan Hubbard and K.C. Jlawllm converged on a scrambling Troy punter for a 28-yard loss deep in Warrior territory ... Steven Ward made a touchdown-saving tackle ... Ward produced a big-time hit on a to Mesa Coach Dave Perkins. They Canadian visitors will follow through on plans to spend Thursday at Disneyland, then try to squeeze final preparation into a light practice Friday morning, Perkins said. • For those confuled. the XL In Battle of the Bay XL represents the Roman numeral equivalent of 40. This year's game features the No. 1 scoring defense in Orange County (Newport Harbor, yielding 3.5 points per game) against a CdM offense that ranks No. 2 In the county in total points scored (76). The site of this year's game, Orange Coast College, has a 1,600 seating capacity, more than a 50% Increase over that of Newport Harbor's Davidson Field, where the game has been held before overflow crowds for more than a decade. Sage Hlll, which haa dotted its junior varsity football schedule with two varsity opponents this fall, will visit Saddleback Valley Christian Friday at 3:15 p.m. for the first varsity game in the Newport Coast-based private school's history. The Ugb~g. coached by Newport Beach Police Officer Tom Monarch, will also be making their 2001 debut, since last week's JV game against Prands' Parker from San Diego was canceled. Moll4I'Ch's coaching staff includes quarterbacks coach Brad Gossen, who succeeded Drew Bledsoe as the starting signal caller at Washington State. Udo Isle Bop Tennta Team, flnaliJtl at State ln the USTA Penn League boys 12-and-unders. From le~ Henri Chomeau, Wade Hatton. JoJm Hutchinson, Daron Arnold, Connor Curry, Ian Connolly and Coach Jon Flagg. Compettng at the Tibmon Penimula Racquet Club for the Gar Glenney Cup, Udo Ille got vfdortes from Connolly and Hutchlmon tn llngles and the two combined for a vfdory tn doubles, but the team came up short, 6-3, to champion Alpine Hllll Tennis Club from Menlo Park In the Portola Valley. ......... --~·--1 \" ' ' ' •--... ,,lif"llrf-.... JC:, "' In .... Ind 9COPI to =~Of THE UNIVERSITY Of CALIFORNIA September, 2001 Pubhshed Newport BHCh·Coate Mell orb Pilot September 1 ' 2001 !517 NOTICE TO CREDITORS OF BULK SALE (U.C.C. 1104, 1105 ~~-1~-MC Nodcl .. her'°V ~ to Cl'8dllo!1 of the within named Mier flit I Wk ...... ~lo be mede of ........ dleatled below. The namM and bull- ow --gf tbt Hiier .,.. PARI BAHRAMI, 2076 Pleoentla Awnue, COlta MM&. CA 92827 The locallon In Calllor- nle of the ctMf -.ecaAIYe office of lhe .... fl• SAME AS ABOVE As llellld by lhe ..... all other bualneae 1\111\M and ldci'HHI ueed by lhe ........ ltlrM ~ befOl'e lhe dU IUCtl lilt ...... Of dlll¥el'ld '° Ill bu¥w 119. AS PROVIDED TO BUYER BY SELLER The namet Incl bull• ,.. addl111• of !tie bu¥W w.: CAURA SEA CORPORATION, 1291 FOOlhlll 8IYd , Swl1a ,.,._ CA llV05 The .... lo be lald .. dllc:fl*9 '" Ol'*lf u:AJ ..... clali*> dlamlnder buelnMt lo- «:*2 et 2075 ~ Ave .. ca.ta Mesa, CA 82827 The buslnetl name 1.-d by lhe Mier II flat location II: ACTION AUTO DISMANTl.ERS The~ <Ill• of lhe btlll .... .. October •• 2001 • fie ofl'ice of CHAPMAN AVENUE ESCROW. 1205 E a..nen Ave • Orange. CA 'l:!lee. ,,. blAk ........ lid lo Callomla Unilorm Commerclll Code Sedlorl 810&.2. I 10 ~ Ill l'llm8 lrld addr9ll of .. per· IOl'I Wiii whom dlllint ffW/ be -.:t II CHAP· MAN AVENUE ESCROW, 1205 E . a..nen Ave.. Olw1ga, STARTING ANEW BUSINESS?r Rates and deadlines are subject to change without notioe. The publisher ~ the right to ceitsor, reclassify, revise or reject any classified advertisement. Please report any error that may be in your classified ad immediately. The Daily Pilot accepts no liability for any error in an advertisement for which it may be responsible except for the cost of the space actually occupied by the error. Credit tan only be allowed for the first insertion. MIUTARY ONLY ARE YOUR LANDLORD N:T NfNI ·OWN Nf1N No Closing Cost If rocJ0f8 8 ~CK with active clrty wilt! a monthly income of Stnvino. Yourf'l/lf~rfy~a VA loan up to S2a3.<m wilt! ,., down and no closing cost CK up 10 S2fi0Jn) wifl lime down. Ratas mtlf (l//M1I be lowet R&USTOF HOMES VETB\AN REAL ESTATE 714-534-aDJ emeit llwtlOpecbel.net ...... 121 ... * pt'yf ATTENTION AGENTS I By Fax (949) 631-6594 (Please include your name and phone number and we'll call you back with a price quote.) ByPllone (949) 642-5678 By Mallllll l'etllllU 330 West B'!Y Street Costa Mesa, CA 92627 At Newport Blvd. & Bay St. Monday ............... Friday 5:00pm • Tuesday ............. Monday S:OOpm Wednesday ........ Tuesday 5:00pm Thursday ...... Wednesday S:OOpm Friday ............. Thursday S:OOpm Saturday .............. Friday 3:00pm Telephone 8:30arn-5:00pm Monday-Friday Walk-In 8:30am-5:00pm Monday-Friday Sunday ................ Friday S:OOpm Index , a_.. ....... 1 ...... .., 2 8'ctOOlll , ... .,,...... .... pool, .. ., ~· Clll 71""7-tm . ----~-, CONSIGNMENTS ' J -~ SOtiTB COAST AUCTION r~)-~ ...... . Reach 80,000 Homes Eadl Weelc For Only $28 per week (4 wt<, min.) Call Loi ....... 642·1671 .d41 "°°"""'*~ 2Mlll I* WMl Ho~ s.w. ,,...., Fax !pl!!! 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(rtdltic). loc:ll wndlnQ liles, no ~. sa.eoo invest· 1111 n1 requited 1~26He01 (24 holn) 12) CM-SCAHI I• =I l•mml .... ~ Side l1t Nllbolt only, t.5 beam, 80ft. 10 ,... to -~ !!O!!l!fr. ....752-2.111 CIClllc °""" .. (V773837·3241N) '24 997 Nabtrs-Pont11c-OMC Bulclt-c.dinac;-Oldatncotle 18881 527-1844 Cdlec De¥lle .. (V895582-3217N) &23,997 Nabera·Pontiac·GMC Buiclc-<Adillac-Okltmobfte 18881 527-1844 Cad Iliac Flttlwood llfougflam ·ee 1-owner, goO<I condition, S2000 MM73-2111 c..ac s.v.. m '95 6411 mi, metallc aindy ~ lld. IP''Y h , chrome whll. garaged. non/llllOlltr, kke new cond vint458724 $12,995 OC Auto Bkr1 Mt-581-1 ... Cacllae SLS 'ti (\192 t 367-32638) $26,997 Nabers·Ponllac·GMC BU1Ck-Cad1llac-Oldamob1le 18881 527·1844 Cacllec STS 'ti IV907999-3218N) $26,997 Nabtrs·Ponllac·GMC Bulcil-Cadtllac-Oldlmob1le (888} 527·1844 Cadillac STS '97 (V820033-3283P) $23.997 Nabtrs·Ponttac-GMC Bud-Cad•ltr.-Oldtmob•te (881!1 527·1844 CADIUAC STS 'f7 31k 1111, Hu ._, beau pllnt job lfld .-.. By Ownw $21,500 obo Mt-71 .. 2514 I-~ I CADILLAC '71 ··-·· Low miles, good oordllon, running excelle1il1 S2.500 9411-&'S-2210 a-oi.t eon.. Conv 'IO 461 1114, wllllblk. tU1o .,,, . dvollle whls, ... ntw. $13,995 vinl779241 o.c. ~ Blul ....-.1 .. 1111W mt ·a ~. ait¥y ~ '12. S1650. s "*°' MVlld Calloma V8. good c:ond, whlll. -• amog, mo111ng must Mii Sit. 111001 W 17fl St CM 11!50 71-M25-7137 949-850·1287 HOUSIKHPEllS NOW <MIY ttrw. et alloldallll rat"! Call Oeaire at * n!§Z2m • ACllB mMDAID ... Mlk' IC • & Al:pelrt on .. doort A lb Z. "Frwe~ ........... dOOlttlll>AOlll ..... .IOll'Olll Ford Eirplolw ••• .. ICLT, M .._, AIJoya (8IOOll) I 113,~7' Tlleodcwe Aoblnt MH1W512 Ford F150 Sul* Cab Sllort led. .,. eek '"'· 5 puaenoer, 1N pwr, am-Im S1119o, co. trailer plqj, a. lorn lite lrt bed cover $10,500 P't-~7937 Ford Rlliglf l'ti:k-tip .. Vtty dlll'I tna, low ml. (Mem) sa.m Tlleodcwe Aoblnt llt-SSW512 Ford 1'llundlltlrd .,. Suplf Cll', ... -(131111) sa.m Tlleodcwe Robina H!=353-1512 Ford Thundwtlird UC '13 So-HO, IUlo. cid. .nrte. CA smog. ._. new ITIOW1!I $2850 714-454-2 t 81 OllC Stfalt VIII 00 (V503918·5A8548) $19.997 Nabers·Pontilc-OMC Butcil..eadillac-Oldsmobtlt (888} 527·1844 GMC ~ E<lltl PU 00 (V240616-05al092 s 15.997 Nabtrs·Ponttac-OMC Butek·C1d1llac-Old$tnobill (888) 527·1844 ltollClt CMc UC '9t air cond, full pwr, low ml (551119) 114,171 Theodora Roblne -.35W512 Jagus Van di!! Piii L WI .. ~. SOii ml, .. new, $26,000. Pllloonenct L TO. Call 94H50-5860 ,,_., ICJS V12 C0\411 •• 41' mt. sllveflg19y llh<. ctlRlmt wllMls, low9'y c:ond, $4996 ville8 t 7S4 oc ldtt:> Bkrl '4Nll-1• UCENtED CONTAACTOfl No Job loo ""· Al llMcM! RtpO, l"1lOdal. flnl, ~ MW !!!vlc!t I! !!§ ••1e1'i J . -." ... ,.-·~-· . .. ... . ,. ... ~~" .. .,..,, ' ' TIUCkS FROM STRAW 'Bach vulncrlble. Weil de:all. the bonora. A dlofoua:hly nWed Well dilCSdcd !be """"" -• Irick 12. nS me daubkid pwid llam roUed NO mt • IU542 0 012 <>run •Void home. Wro1ie SinUIJ U W$ did not inliend ie.dina one ol I* tea. thcte wu no IOWld" reuoo to double 1eVCD WEST EAST llOtNn!p! This was broU&b& IO mind by the followina de.I 6ont the Dmmatt- Spain maid> • the teee111 Ewopem Cwnpionlhipa. £ut'1 IWCHpede opening bid ~ at lelSI 10 ~ an the ~ 1'Jill, nl the res1 of the • 173 • v.w o AU o KJ J063 <> 10 <> A K Q 8 75 • A 10 I 6 5 4 • 3 1 SOUTH • AKQJ9 • 5' aaccion W1ll nlO.lrll. <> 4 ' • KQJ97 The bidding: WEST NORTH £AST SOlJTH The Spmisb West dlOle lO lead lbe ICe ol clubs. a doubefu1 choice &ince North..SOUth certainly held most of the high cards in lhal wil Mnd !here WU no IUIOn to Cltpec:l £asl to hold any trumps. Declarer ruffed in dummy. came lO hind wilh lhe ICC of specie$ and cashed the three club win- ners, ditcarding aJJ of the table's hcaru. After ruffing 11 heart '" dummr. 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